// that was me and my gang
05.12.2025 01:59 โ ๐ 0 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0@bigshotbelle.bsky.social
Good morning heartache, whatโs new? [ run by https://vanny . they/it . 21 . mdni . ]
// that was me and my gang
05.12.2025 01:59 โ ๐ 0 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0๐๐๐๐๐, ๐๐๐๐๐๐ ๐๐๐๐ ๐ท๐๐๐๐ ๐๐ ๐ฐ๐๐๐๐๐.
๐๐๐๐๐ ๐๐๐๐ ๐๐๐๐๐๐ ๐๐'๐ ๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐.
( SOLO END )
04.12.2025 07:33 โ ๐ 0 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 0 ๐ 0.
04.12.2025 07:33 โ ๐ 0 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0"Great," she muttered, turning away from the mutilated picture of the Big Shot. "Gotta put darts on the shopping list."
She left the little man with the red suit pinned to the wall and went to find a bottle that didn't require her to smile before she opened it.
joining the cluster of others that had been thrown on nights just like this one.
Dollie stared at it for a long moment, her chest heaving in the silence of the empty room.
"Bullseye," she whispered to the dark.
...That was it. She was out of ammo.
mimicking the hallucinationโs voice, spitting the words out like poison. She pulled her arm back.
"I'll show you dead weight."
๐๐ฉ๐ธ๐ข๐ค๐ฌ.
The dart hit the board with a satisfying, solid sound. It buried itself deep, right between the eyes of the man in the picture,
No, wait. Her fingers closed around cold metal. One. There was only one left.
She picked it up, weighing it in her palm. It was heavy, brass-tipped, sharp.
She narrowed her eyes, the exhaustion hardening into something cold and hateful.
"Dead weight," she whispered,
Dollie stared at the picture. In the dark, his grin looked even wider. Even from a piece of paper, he seemed to be mocking her.
๐๐ฆ๐ข๐ฅ ๐ธ๐ฆ๐ช๐จ๐ฉ๐ต, the memory of his voice hissed in her ear. ๐๐ธ๐ฐ-๐ฃ๐ช๐ต ๐ด๐ต๐ณ๐ช๐ฑ๐ฑ๐ฆ๐ณ.
She reached onto the small shelf below the board, her fingers groping for a weapon.
Empty.
It was an advertisement for some car dealership or garbage-tier product, featuring a young, Addison with a smug expression. He had slick black hair, white skin, and a grin that looked like it could sell ice to a freezer. He was wearing that damn red suit.
๐๐ฅ๐๐ข๐ฉ๐ค๐ฃ.
She walked over to the far wall, where a cork dartboard hung crookedly between a calendar from three years ago and a cracked mirror.
There was a picture pinned to the center of the bullseye.
It was a torn page from an old magazine, crinkled and yellowing with age.
She stripped off the shimmer dress, leaving her in her slip. She wiped the lipstick off with the back of her hand, smearing it across her cheek like a bruise. She wasn't Lottie Lamb anymore. She wasn't the cute, ditsy thing that men wanted to protect. She was just Dollie.
And she was angry.
She kicked the door shut with her heel and locked it. Then, the deconstruction began.
Off went the trench coat, tossed onto a chair. Off went the shoes.
"Oh, ๐จ๐ฐ๐ฅ," she groaned, the sound raw and guttural as her hooves hit the cool linoleum. God, she hated wearing shoes.
It wasn't a home. It was a storage unit for a living person. The furniture was mismatched, scavenged from secondhand shops. The only thing of value was a vintage record player in the corner.
Dollie didn't turn on the lights. She didn't need to. She knew the layout by heart.
She fumbled with her keys, her hands shaking not from the cold, but from the crash. The adrenaline was gone. The alcohol was wearing off. All that was left was the ache in her feet and the noise in her head.
๐๐ญ๐ช๐ค๐ฌ.
She pushed the door open and stepped into the dark.
a twenty-minute rattle in a metal tube filled with the smell of ozone and damp wool. Lottie sat in the corner, staring at her reflection in the dark window, watching the lights of the city streak by like data streams.
By the time she reached her apartment complex, she was shivering.
"Night, Gigs. Try not to miss me too much."
"Get out of here."
She turned her collar up and pushed through the heavy steel door.
...
The walk to the subway was a blur of neon puddles and the hiss of tires on wet pavement. The ride itself was worseโ
"Go home, Dollie," he said. He was the only one in the place who ever used that name, and he only whispered it. "Get some sleep. You're off the clock."
She stared at the mint for a second, then snatched it up, flashing him a tired, genuine half-smileโthe first real expression sheโd worn all night.
She patted the lump of cash hidden in her dress. "They paid for the privilege of feeling smart. Same old story."
Gigs stopped wiping. He looked at her, his obsidian face unreadable but his eyes soft. He reached under the bar and tossed a small, foil-wrapped mint onto the coaster.
She just picked up the water and downed it in one long, desperate gulp. She set the glass down with a heavy ๐ต๐ฉ๐ถ๐ฅ.
"Those suits?" Gigs asked, nodding toward the empty booth where the whales had been. "They give you any trouble?"
"Nothing I couldn't handle," she rasped, her voice devoid of sugar.
Gigs was there, wiping down the mahogany with rhythmic, heavy strokes. He didn't look up as she approached, but he slid a glass of water across the counter.
"Hydrate," he urged. "You look like you're about to pass out."
Lottie didn't put on the voice. She didn't flutter her lashes.
"Buddy, I was reading teleprompters before you knew how to talk.โ
She shoved the money into her bodice.
...
Before she made her escape, she swung by the bar one last time. The crowd was thinning out, the jazz band winding down into a slow, lazy outro.
As soon as the door clicked shut, the smile dropped off her face like a heavy stone. Her eyes, moments ago wide and sparkling, went dead flat. She looked down at the cash in her hand.
"Read a book," she muttered to herself, her voice low and scraping the bottom of her register.
"Buy yourself some shoes that don't hurt," the Smart One advised, looking at her with a mix of pity and benevolence. "And maybe read a book sometime."
"I'll try, sugar! I promise!"
She waved as they left, smile fixed and radiant, glowing until their silhouettes disappeared through the front door.
"You're a good listener, Lottie. Rare quality these days. Most people just talk."
"Oh, you're too kind!" Lottie squealed, swiping the bills with a sleight of hand sheโd learned from a magician she dated a couple years ago. "Truly! Y'all are savin' my life!"
hiding behind a wall of lip gloss and feigned ignorance.
When the bill finally came, Grabby-Hands reached for his wallet, but the Smart One stopped him.
"I've got it," he said, pulling out a sleek black card. He tossed a heavy stack of Dark Dollars onto the table as a tipโan obscene amount.
She didn't just tolerate them; she guided the conversation perfectly to make them feel like kings. She laughed at jokes that weren't funny. She asked questions she already knew the answers to so the "Smart One" could explain them to her. She was a masterclass in social engineering,
04.12.2025 07:33 โ ๐ 0 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0He sat up straighter, adjusting his tie. "You have to, in my line of work."
"I knew it," she beamed, pouring the last of the champagne into his glass, even though he hadn't asked. "You're the brains of the operation! I can always tell."
She spent the next twenty minutes playing him like a fiddle.
She watched the tension leave his shoulders. He didn't see a tired, broken woman anymore. He saw a mirror reflecting a genius. He saw a simple creature awed by his intellect.
"I... well. I suppose I do have an eye for detail," he muttered, pulling his hand back, but the cold interrogation was gone.